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Church of Saint Martin de Néry dans l'Oise

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine religieux
Eglise romane et gothique
Oise

Church of Saint Martin de Néry

    1 Place de l'Église 
    60320 Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Église Saint-Martin de Néry
Crédit photo : Pierre Poschadel - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Moyen Âge central
Bas Moyen Âge
Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1100
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
vers 1140
Construction of Romanesque bell tower
1260–début XIVe siècle
Construction of the radiant choir
XVIe siècle
Recast of the arrow and vaults
1757
Ceiling of the Romanesque nave
1901
Inauguration of the neo-gothic nave
22 août 1949
Ranking of the bell tower and choir
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The choir and the bell tower: inscription by decree of 22 August 1949

Key figures

Guillaume Parvy - Bishop of Senlis (XVI century) Consecrate the church in 1533 after bent.
Louis Graves - Local historian (18th century) Describes the Romanesque nave as dark.
Dominique Vermand - Art historian (XX century) Analysis of Romanesque and Gothic architecture.
Pierre-Jean Trombetta - Specialist in religious art (XX century) Date the choir after 1260.
Abbé Philippe Pamart - Last parish priest of Saintines (XX century) Dessert the church until 1990.
Régis Singer - Artisan campanaire (XXI century) Restore the bell of 1727 in 2012.

Origin and history

The church Saint-Martin de Néry, located in the Oise department in the Hauts-de-France region, is a composite building whose oldest parts date back to the 1140s. Its late Romanesque bell tower, characterized by a triumphal arch carved of broken sticks and a vault in a broken cradle, is attributed to the same workshop as the choir of Saint Peter's church of Béthisy-Saint-Pierre. This bell tower, 37 meters high, was surmounted in the sixteenth century by a stone arrow flanked by four flamboyant bell towers, replacing an earlier Romanesque structure.

The choir, built between 1260 and the beginning of the 14th century, illustrates the late radiant style with a five-paned apse and reamped windows without capital columns, an innovation that appeared after 1260. The vaults and stained glass windows of the choir were redone in the 16th century, during which time the early nave, described as dark and low, underwent major transformations. The present nave, of neo-Gothic style, was inaugurated in 1901 after the demolition of the Romanesque nave and its coasts at the end of the 19th century.

The church houses remarkable furniture, including 16th century stalls classified as historical monument, decorated with mercies and accomodations carved with flamboyant and reborn Gothic motifs. The fragments of Renaissance stained glass, dating from the first half of the 16th century, represent Doctors of the Church as St Jerome and St Gregory the Great. These elements, along with the bronze bell of 1727, testify to the artistic and historical richness of the site.

Under the Old Regime, the parish of Néry depended on the diocese of Senlis, with the chapter of the cathedral as a collator of the cure. The big tithe returned to the Abbey of Royallieu. After the Revolution, the parish was attached to the diocese of Beauvais and then integrated into the parish consolidation of the autumn valley in the 20th century. Today, the church, affiliated with the parish of Verberie, hosts early Sunday Masses five times a year.

The church's exterior architecture reveals a nave in irregular bells, contrasting with the bell tower and the cut stone choir. The bell tower, with flat buttresses, features a belfry floor adorned with broken arched groined bays, surrounded by columns with capitals carved with water leaves and monstrous heads. The octagonal arrow, openworked with doculi and rectangular openings, is a remarkable example of 16th century flamboyant art.

Inside the church combines Romanesque elements, such as the base of the vaulted bell tower in a cradle, and Gothic additions, including the large arcades of the neo-Gothic nave. The capitals of the triumphal arch, adorned with water and volute leaves, as well as the abutments of the arches, illustrate the transition between the Romanesque and Gothic styles. The 17th century baroque altarpiece, although devoid of its original painting, and carved stalls, highlight the artistic evolution of the building throughout the centuries.

External links